New on Netflix, Amazon Prime and other streaming week of June 15

“Love, Simon” (2018, PG-13) uses the familiar conventions of the coming-of-age teenage romantic comedy for the story of a gay high school boy (Nick Robinson) coming out to his friends and family. Jennifer Garner and Josh Duhamel play his parent and Greg Berlanti (creator of the CW superhero shows) directs. On Cable On Demand and VOD as well as DVD.

BroadwayHD, the service that allows theater lovers to see recordings of live Broadway shows at home, expanded its scope just a bit with ten programs from the acrobatic circus theater company Cirque du Soleil, including their “Avatar”-themed production “Toruk” (2016).

Pay-Per-View / Video on Demand

Alicia Vikander plays Lara Croft in “Tomb Raider” (2018, PG-13), the big screen reboot based on the hit video game about a fearless female adventurer in the “Indiana Jones” mold. Also new:

“Lust Stories” (India, 2018, not rated with subtitles), an anthology of four short films exploring love, sex, and relationships in modern India;

“Sunday’s Illness” (Spain, 2018, not rated, with subtitles), a drama about a wealthy woman who reconnects with the daughter she abandoned 35 years ago.

True stories: the Oscar-nominated documentary “Cutie and the Boxer” (2013, R) profiles eccentric artist Ushio Shinohara and his wife Noriko, who embarks on her own artistic career after a life of assisting his dreams.

Streaming TV: Marlon Wayans stars in the family sitcom “Marlon: Season 1,” arriving as the second season begins on NBC. Also new: western/supernatural hybrid “Wynonna Earp: Season 2” and Netflix Original comedy “The Ranch: Part 5” with Aston Kutcher, Sam Shepard, and the final episodes featuring Danny Masterson.

Jason Momoa stars in “Braven” (2018, R) as a logger in rural Canada who goes up against drug runners threatening his family.

Billy Bob Thornton is back in the second season of the Prime Original legal drama “Goliath” from creator David E. Kelley.

“The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman” (1974, not rated), the powerful TV movie starring Cicely Tyson as a woman born into slavery who lives through the civil rights movement of the 1960s, won nine Emmy awards. Also newly available:

Cult movies: “Rock ‘n’ Roll High School” (1979, PG), produced by Roger Corman and starring the Ramones, is one of the greatest rock and rebellion movies ever made. It arrives on Prime Video along with a handful of other Corman drive-in classics, including:

“Precious” (2009, R), directed by Lee Daniel from the novel “Push” by Sapphire, stars Gabourey Sidibe as an overweight, illiterate, pregnant teenager in 1987 Harlem who finds hope in an oppressive life (Prime Video and Hulu).

Foreign affairs: “The Second Mother” (Brazil, 2015, R, not rated), an upstairs downstairs comedy of class divisions thrown into chaos, won a Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.

HBO Now

Inspired by a true story, “American Made” (2017, R) stars Tom Cruise as a pilot who makes a small fortune flying weapons and drugs between the U.S. and South America for the CIA in the 1980s.

Dax Shepard and Michael Pena cruise the highways in “CHIPS” (2017, R), a comedy reboot of the 1970s cop drama.

Arriving Saturday night is “The Mountain Between Us” (2017, PG-13), starring Kate Winslet and Idris Elba as strangers who must work together to survive a plane crash.

Showtime Anytime

“Pork Pie” (2017, not rated), a road movie action comedy about three accidental outlaws driving the length of New Zealand, is a remake of the 1980 cult film “Goodbye Pork Pie” directed by the son of the original director. It makes its US debut on Showtime. Also new: survival drama “Walking Out (2017, PG-13) with Matt Bomer and Bill Pullman.

FilmStruck

TCM Select Pick of the Week is “Baby Doll” (1956), starring Karl Malden as a lascivious mill owner on the skids who is counting the days before he makes his child bride (Carroll Baker) his wife in fact as well as in title and Eli Wallach is rival businessman who takes revenge by seducing the girl. Directed by Elia Kazan from an original screenplay by Tennessee Williams, the film was condemned by the Legion of Decency and called “just possibly the dirtiest American-made motion picture that has ever been legally exhibited” by Time magazine. Streaming through December 7.

The quintessential Rat Pack movie, the original “Ocean’s 11” (1960) drops Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, and Joey Bishop in Las Vegas for an epic casino heist. Let’s face it, this film just sort of clumps along — veteran Lewis Milestone was more babysitter than director, trying to corral the carousing bunch and stuck filming their improvised antics — but it delivers zingy moments of Rat Pack zeitgeist, the over-the-top cigar chomping fun of Akin Tamiroff, and a terrific cast that includes Richard Conte, Cesar Romero, Henry Silva, and a (mostly wasted) Angie Dickinson, with cameos by Shirley MacLaine, Red Skelton, and George Raft. It arrives on FilmStruck as the all-woman sequel “Ocean’s 8” plays in theaters and is part of the “Director of the week: Lewis Milestone” collection of eleven features, from his early gangster drama “The Racket” (1928, silent with score) through his classic “Of Mice and Men” (1939) with Burgess Meredith and Lon Chaney Jr. to his remake of “Mutiny on the Bounty” (1962) with Marlon Brando.

Two miniseries now available: the original PBS production “Tales of the City” (1994), based on the stories by Armistead Maupin, and the BBC version of “The Diary of Anne Frank” (2009) with Iain Glen and Felicity Jones.